The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, also called
People’s Army, a terrorist group self-proclaimed the Marxist-Leninist
revolutionary guerrilla organization, has captured around 750 hostages, holding
them in Columbia’s
jungles. Only six of them were released in the last three months.
Both the United
States and the European Union include the
FARC on the list of foreign terrorist organizations.
Usually, their favorite procedure is a mechanism of prisoner
exchange. This means liberating political and military hostages in exchange for
the release of a number of jailed criminal rebels.
One of the victims was the French photographer and
politician Ingrid Betancourt, kidnapped by the armed forces of Colombia on
February 23, 2002, while campaigning for the presidency. She was captured at an
unknown location in the Colombian jungle. As she has hepatitis B and a tropical
skin ailment, she is in critical condition.
The rebel group said they would release the prisoners in
exchange of two FARC’s leaders imprisoned in the United States.
“If there is a hope Mr. Chavez and Mr. Sarkozy will go to
find Mrs. Betancourt at the frontier,” French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner
said on the sidelines of a NATO summit in Romania, the Associated Press
reports.
In an interview with Associated Press Television News,
French Foreign Minister declared France could temporarily liberate Colombian
rebels in its Caribbean territories as part of a deal to free Betancourt and
other hostages.
The mission “depends on whether there was a prior agreement
between the French and the FARC,” Carlos Lozano, director of Voz, the communist
party newspaper, said, according to the AP.
Colombian President Alvaro Uribe assured France he would
do whatever it takes to help them rescue the hostage.